Phoenix, Ausgaben 21-24English Literature Society, Korea University., 1979 |
Im Buch
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Seite 10
... Lear . Shakes- peare's Lear may be timeless and out of the folklore times ; characters in Tate's Lear are distinctly creatures of mannered society , and his peasants are civilized enough to know how to organize themselves in rebellion ...
... Lear . Shakes- peare's Lear may be timeless and out of the folklore times ; characters in Tate's Lear are distinctly creatures of mannered society , and his peasants are civilized enough to know how to organize themselves in rebellion ...
Seite 19
... Lear . " 38 ) From all accounts , twentieth century actor - interpreters seem inclined to agree with Irving's view of Lear as a figure of grandeur and larger - than - life proportions , although inevit- ably the present century's view of ...
... Lear . " 38 ) From all accounts , twentieth century actor - interpreters seem inclined to agree with Irving's view of Lear as a figure of grandeur and larger - than - life proportions , although inevit- ably the present century's view of ...
Seite 22
... Lear was , to Speaight , an almost complete failure , because of the dissonance of its realism with the play's theme , and because it reduced Shakespeare's cosmic drama to domesticity.50 Rosenberg also disapproves of Laughton's Lear for ...
... Lear was , to Speaight , an almost complete failure , because of the dissonance of its realism with the play's theme , and because it reduced Shakespeare's cosmic drama to domesticity.50 Rosenberg also disapproves of Laughton's Lear for ...